Bledsoe v. Hammons

287 P. 297, 36 Ariz. 489, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 210
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1930
DocketCivil No. 2878.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 287 P. 297 (Bledsoe v. Hammons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bledsoe v. Hammons, 287 P. 297, 36 Ariz. 489, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 210 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This suit was brought by the trustees of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Arizona against A. T. Hammons, superintendent of banks and, as such, receiver of the Prescott State Bank, an insolvent, to impress a trust upon the latter ’s assets in favor, of the lodge. The preference sought was denied, but the demand was allowed as a general claim, and the lodge appeals.

It appears from a stipulation of the parties that the facts are, in substance, as follows: That for several years prior to November 19th, 1925, R. N. Fredericks, now deceased, as treasurer of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Arizona, had kept the funds of the lodge commingled with his personal funds in his personal account in the Prescott State Bank, with the exception of $2,160.73 which was kept in an account denominated “Masonic Home Endowment”.; that on November 19th, 1925, Fredericks drew a check upon said Masonic Home Endowment account, and opened a new account denominated “R. N. Fredericks, Treasurer Grand Lodge, General,” and deposited the check drawn upon the Masonic Home endowment account in such Grand Lodge general account; that on the same, day Fredericks, in the usual and ordinary course of business, drew three checks upon his personal account and deposited them as follows: R. N. Fredericks, treasurer Masonic Home journal fund, $8,515.67. R. N. Fredericks, treasurer A. L. Grow fund, $876.93. R. N. Fredericks, treasurer Masonic Home endowment fund, *491 $15,703.01. That none of the transactions herein mentioned as occurring November 19th, 1925, increased the assets of the Prescott State Bank or those later coming into the hands of the receiver, except in the manner above set out, but simply constituted a transfer of funds from a long existing account to the accounts above mentioned; that said Fredericks at said time had a sufficient amount of funds to his credit in said bank from which said checks could be paid and were paid; that the same amounts appeared to the credit of the several funds as above set out at the time the receiver took possession of the bank six days later; that Charles H. Hinderer, at said date, was vice-president and cashier of the bank, had been for three years actively engaged in the affairs of the bank as director and officer, during such time personally and constantly gave his attention to the duties of the offices he held and that the deposit slips for the foregoing deposits were in the handwriting of Hinderer; that on the nineteenth day of November, 1925, the bank was in possession of recoverable assets exceeding $1,000,000, and at the time the bank examiner took possession of the bank on November 25th, 1925, the recoverable assets of the bank were likewise in excess of $1,000,000; that from November 19th, 1925, up to and including the time of the closing of the bank and the taking possession by the bank examiner, the assets of the bank remained in approximately the same amount; that on the nineteenth day of November, 1925, and for some time prior thereto and at all times subsequent thereto, Prescott State Bank was insolvent and not in condition to pay its debts in the ordinary course. It was admitted that Homer R. Wood, deputy superintendent of banks and receiver of the Prescott State Bank, if duly sworn would testify that he was familiar with the condition of the bank from November 19th and for some time prior thereto and at all times subsequent *492 thereto; that said bank was hopelessly and irretrievably insolvent and not in condition to pay its debts in the ordinary course, and that such condition was reasonably apparent to any person familiar with the condition of the bank at such time; that the condition at such times was such that it was reasonably apparent to any person familiar therewith that the bank would presently be unable to meet its oligations as they were likely to mature, and that it could not and would not pay to the said E. N. Fredericks, as treasurer of said Grand Lodge, the sums of money herein-before set out on demand or at all,

While we have stated all the facts stipulated, we regard the case as turning upon the effect of what was done between Fredericks and the bank on November 19th. Indeed, appellant 'predicates its - right to 'be preferred on that transaction. It admits that up to that time the relation between the bank and Fredericks was that of debtor and creditor, as well to the trust fund as to his personal funds, but it contends that the paper transaction of that date was in fact a new deposit, “irrespective of its source,” and that it should be treated as though Fredericks had first opened an account on that date with the bank and deposited to himself as treasurer of the lodge actual cash. It is asserted that when this account was opened the bank was, to the knowledge of its officers, hopelessly insolvent and by the acceptance of the deposit perpetrated a fraud on the depositor and thereupon became and was a trustee ex maleficio of such funds. It is obvious that if the transaction of November 19th had the effect contended for by appellant the essential facts of augmentation and identification entitling one to a preference are established.

First, was there a new deposit on the 19th of November? We think what was done on that date was no more nor less than an exposition and acknowledgment by Fredericks that the funds carried in bank in *493 his personal account and as his personal funds were in part trust funds of the lodge. By such paper transaction the books of the bank indicated what part of the funds he had deposited “for several years prior to November 19th” as his own were trust funds of the lodge. It did not have the effect of changing his relation to such funds. The ownership of the money was not changed from him to the lodge. It belonged to the lodge before the change in bookkeeping just as much as after the change. Without indulging the fiction that a mere alteration of the method of bookkeeping changed the ownership of the funds, there could be no augmentation of the assets of the bank. The change did not add a five-cent piece to the bank’s assets or change in the least Fredericks’ relation thereto. It was a general deposit after the change as before. So far as the relation between the bank and Fredericks was concerned, it was all the time that of debtor and creditor.. The bank owed Fredericks the amount of the trust deposit and on his demand in proper form was obligated to pay it to him. As between him and the bank such funds possessed no trust quality, and when the bank failed he had no right to any preference. 7 C. J. 628, § 305.

What was done on November 19th did not constitute a new deposit or a deposit of any kind. It was simply a belated written acknowledgment by Fredericks on the books of the bank that the funds of the lodge, which he had been receiving and commingling with his personal funds “for several years prior to November 19, 1925,” were in fact not his, but the lodge’s. The deposits were actually made during the “several prior years” and at a time when the bank’s solvency was unquestioned.

The appellant, to sustain its contention that there was a new deposit on. November 19th, relies upon a line of cases which hold that if the payee of a check deposits the- check in the bank on which it is drawn, *494

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Bluebook (online)
287 P. 297, 36 Ariz. 489, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bledsoe-v-hammons-ariz-1930.